Inflation is likely to persist and lead to a crisis in the years ahead, according to a warning from Deutsche Bank economists, reported CNBC.

Deutsche issued a dire warning, that is well outside the consensus from policymakers and Wall Street, that focusing on stimulus while dismissing inflation fears will prove to be a mistake if not in the near term, then in 2023 and beyond.

“The consequence of delay will be greater disruption of economic and financial activity than would otherwise be the case when the Fed does finally act,” Deutsche’s chief economist, David Folkerts-Landau, and others wrote. “In turn, this could create a significant recession and set off a chain of financial distress around the world, particularly in emerging markets.”

The analysis says that’s because the Federal Reserve, and its new framework, tolerates higher inflation for the sake of a full and inclusive recovery.

The bank further asserts that the Fed’s intention not to tighten policy until inflation shows a sustained rise will have dire impacts.

As part of its approach to inflation, and until it sees “substantial further progress” toward its inclusive goals, the Fed won’t raise interest rates or curtail its asset purchase program.

They are not near those objectives, multiple central bank officials have said.

Indicators such as the consumer price and personal consumption expenditures price indices are well above the Fed’s 2% inflation goal.

Policymakers say the current rise in inflation is temporary and will abate once supply disruptions and base effects from the early months of the coronavirus pandemic crisis wear off.

The Deutsche team disagrees, saying that aggressive stimulus and fundamental economic changes will present inflation ahead that the Fed will be ill-prepared to address.

The Deutsche position is not widely held by economists and most on Wall Street agree with the Fed’s view that current inflation pressures are transitory, and they doubt there will be any policy changes soon.

Chief economist at Goldman Sachs, Jan Hatzius, said there are “strong reasons” to support the position. One he cites is the likelihood that the expiration of enhanced unemployment benefits will send workers back to their jobs in the coming months, easing wage pressures.

On price pressures in general, Hatzius said that much of current spike is being driven by “the unprecedented role of outliers” that will ebb and bring levels back closer to normal.

“All this suggests that Fed officials can stick with their plan to exit only very gradually from the easy current policy stance,” Hatzius wrote.

That will be a mistake, according to the Deutsche view.

Congress has approved more than $5 trillion in pandemic-related stimulus so far, and the Fed has nearly doubled its balance sheet, through monthly asset purchases, to just shy of $8 trillion.

The stimulus continues to come through even with an economy that is expected to grow at about a 10% pace in the second quarter and an employment picture that has added an average 478,000 jobs a month in 2021.

“Never before have we seen such coordinated expansionary fiscal and monetary policy. This will continue as output moves above potential,” Folkerts-Landau said. “This is why this time is different for inflation.”

The Deutsche team said the coming inflation could resemble the 1970s experience, a decade during which inflation averaged nearly 7% and was well into double digits at various times. Soaring food and energy prices along with the end of price controls helped push that era’s soaring inflation, reported CNBC.

Then-Fed Chairman Paul Volcker led the effort to squash inflation but needed to use dramatic interest rate hikes that triggered a recession.

The Deutsche team worries that such a scenario could play out again.

“Already, many sources of rising prices are filtering through into the US economy. Even if they are transitory on paper, they may feed into expectations just as they did in the 1970s,” they said. “The risk then, is that even if they are only embedded for a few months, they may be difficult to contain, especially with stimulus so high.”

The firm said interest rate hikes could “cause havoc in a debt-heavy world,” with financial crises likely particularly in emerging economies where growth won’t be able to overcome higher financing costs.


Source: Newmax

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